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Ghost of Tsushima Director’s Cut PC Review: A masterpiece that stands out from the rest

Nixxes Software’s finely tuned PC port of Ghost of Tsushima is better than ever.

Just when vast open-world games were starting to become noticeably tiring, Ghost of Tsushima arrived like a summer breeze. Sucker Punch’s Japan-set action-adventure game didn’t reinvent the wheel by any means, but it did deliver a memorable samurai tale that reshaped familiar open-world tropes into original ways of player interaction. Ghost of Tsushima and its massive success on PlayStation consoles demonstrated that the open-world playbook (largely written by Ubisoft’s Assassin’s Creed and Far Cry series) had become so stale that a small but clever new idea could be enough to create a meaningful experience.

Through its simplified quest design, narrative approach to map markers, and evocative visuals and music, Ghost of Tsushima set the standard for what a modern open-world action-adventure title should be. And now the game is coming to PC in a package that amplifies what it already did well on PS4 and PS5. First released on PlayStation consoles in 2021 and now available on PC from Steam and the Epic Games Store, Ghost of Tsushima Director’s Cut comes with a host of improvements, including the Iki Island expansion, improved graphics, and a faster framerate. But does a four-year-old game still hold up to the rapidly changing standards of modern video games?

The answer to that question may vary depending on how much open world you’ve played. If you’re tired of running around seemingly endless maps chasing the same objectives without any payoff, Ghost of Tsushima may feel boring, especially if you’ve tried the game on consoles. But if you’re new to the game, Sucker Punch’s stirring tale of revenge and samurai honor, expertly ported to PC by Nixxes Software, is definitely worth your attention. I got the Platinum for Ghost of Tsushima on PS4 and played the Director’s Cut and its included Iki Island expansion pack on PS5, but I still happily spent time with the Steam version of the game.

Ghost of Tsushima tells the story of a samurai, Jin Sakai, who embarks on a path of revenge when a brutal Mongol army led by Khotun Khan invades his homeland, the Japanese island of Tsushima. Khan and his merciless warriors eradicate samurai resistance, destroy villages, and capture Jin’s uncle, Lord Shimura, the land steward of Tsushima. Jin, a young samurai who grew up under Lord Shimura’s protection after his father was killed at an early age, barely survives the battle but sets out to find his uncle and save Tsushima.

Bound and broken by the samurai code of honor, Jin eventually enlists the help of his allies and adopts guerilla tactics to gain the upper hand against his brutal enemies. As it turns out, the samurai tradition of fighting the enemy head-on in a just battle doesn’t hold up so well against the Mongol army, who have no qualms about using any dirty means to seize control.

Jin reluctantly abandons the rules his uncle drilled into him and becomes Ghost, a warrior who uses deception, distraction and stealth to resist the Mongol invasion and free his uncle. His unconventional methods are aided by unconventional friends – commoners far removed from the shackles of straitjacket-wearing samurai morality. Having lived his whole life in black and white, Jin walks the grey path for a higher purpose. Ghost of Tsushima’s story, like its systems, treads familiar territory. We’ve all seen and read revenge stories in which the protagonist is confronted with the rigidity of his values and forced to think in unnatural ways. But the sophisticated presentation of the game’s ideas trumps its reliance on tried-and-true tropes.

Visual Presentation

Ghost of Tsushima’s biggest selling point on PC is its graphical fidelity. The action-adventure title is one of the best-looking games on PlayStation, and the new PC port allows the game’s visual presentation to shine in a way that consoles just can’t. If you’ve got the right system, Ghost of Tsushima Director’s Cut can go toe-to-toe with some of the most graphically impressive games on PC. While the character models and facial animations look a bit dated in 2024, its rich, diverse environments are still some of the best in the medium.

Ghost of Tsushima features some of the most impressive environments in video games.

However, animation quality remains high across the board. Jin controls smoothly whether he’s riding his trusty steed or using his grappling hook to scale tall cliffs and towers. Combat animations may be some of the best ever seen in a third-person action-adventure title; each sword stance comes with its own unique set of animations and moves, adding individuality to your play style. Animated with the help of actual Japanese sword experts, Jin’s sword movements flow like a river of deadly slashes and thrusts, all the while retaining the weight and impact of a high-stakes duel.

On PC, Tsushima comes to life at higher graphics settings. Whereas in other open-world games, persistent markers and HUD elements actively ruin the immersion, Ghost of Tsushima encourages you to interact with the natural environment to discover interesting items and treasures. Chasing foxes or chasing golden birds through tranquil pastures and rolling grasslands is a meditative experience because everything looks so beautiful . The game’s evocative visuals are anchored by a vibrant art style that finds a sweet spot somewhere between the natural realism of Red Dead Redemption 2 and the saturated fantasy of The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild. Ghost of Tsushima doesn’t try to look realistic, instead opting for poetic romanticism as its visual identity.

Horses are the best way to get around Tsushima.

PC Features

Nixxes also prioritizes performance across a wide range of hardware capabilities, from high-end PCs to handhelds like Steam Deck. The game features unlocked framerates on PC and plenty of graphics options that can be tweaked to get the performance and image quality you want. There are also options to support upscaling and frame generation technologies such as Nvidia DLSS 3, AMD FSR 3, and Intel XeSS to improve the game’s performance. Unfortunately, Ghost of Tsushima does not have ray tracing support. While the inclusion of ray-traced reflections would pose technical challenges and may impact the game’s performance, the feature is a given for modern PC titles that boast impressive visuals.

The game supports ultrawide monitor setups on PC and the PS5 DualSense controller. Ghost of Tsushima Director’s Cut is also the first Sony title to come with the new PlayStation Overlay on PC. At any point during the game, you can press Shift + F1 on your keyboard to bring up a window overlay that displays your PlayStation account, friends list, and trophies. Note, however, that you will need to connect to your PlayStation Network account in-game to access this feature.

Ghost of Tsushima Director’s Cut is the first Sony title for PC to feature the new PlayStation Overlay.

PC Performance

I played Ghost of Tsushima Director’s Cut on the HP Omen 16-xf0060AX provided by HP for this review. As such, the resolution was limited to 1080p, but I got stable performance even at very high settings. According to the game’s system requirements published before release, you need an Nvidia GeForce RTX 4080 or AMD Radeon RX 7900 XT GPU to achieve 60fps at 4K resolution. With DLSS frame generation turned on with an Nvidia RTX 4060 GPU, I was able to achieve stable frame rates of over 100fps at 1080p resolution. There was very little stuttering during gameplay at various graphics settings.

Reviewing Ghost of Tsushima Director’s Cut on the HP Omen 16

Processor: AMD Ryzen 7 7840HS

Graphics: Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 laptop GPU (8GB GDDR6 dedicated).

Memory: 16GB DDR5-5600Mhz RAM

Storage: 1TB PCIe Gen4 NVMe TLC M.2 SSD

With DLSS upscaling set to Quality and the graphics option set to Very High, the average frame rate was an excellent 114.5 fps, with the 1% and 0.1% low averages well above 70 fps. Lowering the graphics settings to High caused a slight visual degradation and raised the average frame rate to 146.8 fps. Adjusting the DLSS upscaling option to Performance gave even better results, with average frame rates of 128.7 fps and 159.8 fps at Very High and High settings, respectively. Of course, you’ll need a more high-end system to run the game at a stable high frame rate at 4K resolution. But as Nixxes promised, Ghost of Tsushima is optimized to run smoothly on a wide range of hardware.

Ghost of Tsushima uses vibrant colors in a variety of ways.

Verdict

Sony has had a strategy of delaying the release of PC ports of its first-party PlayStation titles. The success of the PC versions is a testament to the strength of the company’s exclusive single-player games, such as God of War and Marvel’s Spider-Man Remaster, which continue to generate interest years after their initial release. Ghost of Tsushima Director’s Cut perhaps highlights that phenomenon better than most other releases. The game is the largest single-player release for PlayStation on Steam, surpassing God of War’s all-time player count on Valve’s platform. This is despite a PlayStation Network account linking controversy that led to pre-orders being cancelled and the game being removed from Steam in over 170 countries where PSN is not supported.

PC players have clearly been waiting for a port of Ghost of Tsushima, and Nixxes Software has released a finely tuned package that looks better than ever, plays smoother than ever, and has some nifty PC-exclusive features that enhance the experience. Of course, the game itself remains unchanged, so its flaws are present on PC; the open-world idea opts to recycle existing tropes rather than reinvent them, and the core gameplay loop isn’t all that different from Assassin’s Creed titles. But when it comes to presenting those familiar ideas in an exciting way, Ghost of Tsushima Director’s Cut goes a step further than most.

Pros:

  • Strong Points
  • Amazing visuals
  • Consistent PC Performance
  • Advanced Graphics Settings

Cons:

  • A formulaic open world
  • Lack of ray tracing support

Rating (out of 10): 8

  • Ghost of Tsushima Director’s Cut was released for PC on May 16. The game was tested on an HP Omen 16-xf0060AX laptop provided by HP.
  • The price for the PC version starts at Rs 3,999 on Steam and Epic Games Store.

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